Messi appears in Spanish Court in tax fraud case

September 27, 2013 03:13 pm | Updated June 07, 2016 07:44 am IST - GAVA, Spain

FC Barcelona's Lionel Messi challenges for the ball during their friendly game with  Lechia Gdansk  in Gdansk, Poland, Tuesday, July 30, 2013.  During FC Barcelona's third friendly game of their summer tournee, Brazil's Neymar made his debut in the team. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)

FC Barcelona's Lionel Messi challenges for the ball during their friendly game with Lechia Gdansk in Gdansk, Poland, Tuesday, July 30, 2013. During FC Barcelona's third friendly game of their summer tournee, Brazil's Neymar made his debut in the team. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)

Lionel Messi and his father appeared before a Spanish judge to answer questions in a multimillion-euro tax fraud case on Friday.

Messi gave answers for around half an hour after his father Jorge Horacio Messi was questioned. After they were whisked away in separate cars, Messi’s lawyer spoke outside the courthouse No. 3 in Gava, an easygoing coastal town just south of Barcelona near Messi’s residence.

“The Messi family wanted to act with transparency, clarity and with a sense of cooperation, and that is how things went today as well,” said Cristobal Martell, Messi’s lawyer.

“It was evident that there was little intent of committing fraud and a great willingness to normalise the situation with the tax office and not to get involved in a fierce battle with the state in an attempt to interpret the current tax regulations,” Martell said.

A complaint lodged by a Spanish state prosecutor in June said Messi and his father tried to conceal earnings from the player’s image rights. The complaint alleged the Argentina international owed 4 million euros ($5.3 million) in back taxes during 2007, 2008 and 2009.

Messi’s father made a payment of more than 5 million euros ($6.6 million) on Aug. 14 to cover alleged back taxes and interest. That payment led the court to decide that neither Messi nor his father needed to post bail.

Friday’s hearing was to see if there are clear indications of illegality. If so, then the judge could recommend that the case be prosecuted, barring an out-of-court settlement.

If the case goes to trial and Messi and his father are found guilty, they could face a fine reaching 150 percent of the amount of back taxes and possible prison time.

In the complaint, state prosecutor Raquel Amado alleges that from 2006-09 Messi “obtained significant revenue derived from the transfer to third parties of his image rights, income which should have been taxed.” The complaint says Messi “circumvented his tax obligations” by using shell companies in tax havens such as Belize and Uruguay.

Messi and his father have always denied any wrongdoing. They have received the backing of Barcelona president Sandro Rosell and former president Joan Laporta, who was head of the club during the years covered in the complaint.

Messi, wearing a suit but no tie, arrived looking relaxed and smiling at the courthouse an hour after his father.

Messi was cheered on by a group of fans, many of them children, and curious passers-by that grew to around 50 people alongside about 100 journalists and photographers.

Upon leaving the courthouse, several fans chanted “Messi! Messi!” and a few teenagers chased his car as it sped away down a sunny street.

The case has apparently not distracted Messi at work. Messi is joint-leading scorer of the Spanish league with seven goals. Barcelona plays at Almeria on Saturday looking to maintain its lead of the league.

The 26-year-old Messi is widely considered the best player of his generation after winning several titles with Barcelona and the highest individual award, the world player of the year, a record four years in a row.

Finance Minister Cristobal Montoro warned football players in April they should make sure they are “comfortable” with their tax affairs. Last year former Barcelona player Luis Figo paid 2.45 million euros in taxes pertaining to image rights from 1997-99.

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